Changing Times: Reconciliation or Retribution

I begin with a familiar song by
Bob Dylan that I invite you to join me in singing, because its prophetic words
ring ever so true today.

Come gather ’round, people
Wherever you roam,
And admit that the waters
Around you have grown,
And accept it that soon
You’ll be drenched to the bone,
If your time to you is worth savin’.
And you better start swimmin’
Or you’ll sink like a stone,
For the times they are a-changin’.

In January 2001 I was
invited to the Martin Luther King Day Breakfast, sponsored by Saint Cyprian
Episcopal Church, an African American congregation in Boston, Massachusetts. It
attracted city, state and national officials including Mayor Menino, Governor Cellucci, and Senator John Kerry.

During my remarks, I mentioned that my understanding of biblical prophecy was that it had to occur within a generation, around 20-25 years. And based on that understanding, I offered my own prophetic view of the first 20 years of the new millennium, and suspected that America would elect its first black president during that time. Now, while Kerry, who would later become a 2004 presidential candidate and serve as Obama’s Secretary of State, Obama at the time was nowhere on the political radar screen, nor was any other black politician. So, the audience was noticeably surprised at my remarks.

And while this bit of
prophecy was intended to offer a ray of hope following the disputed 2000
presidential election when George W. Bush won the executive office though Al
Gore won the popular vote, it came as well with somber news that life would get
worse for people of color before it got better. For the election of a black
president would elicit such a negative reaction from white voters determined to
preserve that status quo, that every effort would be devised to prevent such an
event from ever happening again.

Now, nearly 20 years
later, we are living in the aftermath of a two-term Obama presidency, during
which he won the 2008 election with just 43% of white votes and the 2012
election with just 39% of white votes; and during which a conservative Republican,
predominantly white congress, did everything possible to prevent the nation’s
first black president from forwarding his agenda for the country. And now,
nearly 20 years later, we are living in the wake of a presidency which, like
Bush, won the white house through the Electoral College and without the
majority of popular consent, that continues to promote an agenda that attempts
to dismantle everything the previous administration tried to enact.

Former Republican Senator of Arizona, Jeff
Flakes, in a recent National Public Radio interview with reporter Mary Louise
Kelly, said that his party concluded after the 2012 elections that it had to
appeal to a more racially and ethnically diverse segment of America, but then
left that decision behind to follow the narrowly focused agenda of the far
right. (July 15, 2019) This agenda represented an outspoken segment of
the population that was afraid of the perspectives and policies that a more
racially and ethnically diverse America would bring to the legislative,
leadership and decision-making process of our democracy.

Is This Just a
Far-Right Agenda?

Now while the agenda of the far right might be
narrowly focused, the question I raise to white Americans in this room and
throughout the country is whether this agenda represents only the far right.
Let’s take a look at the data.

In 2016, 61.4% of Americans qualified to vote (137.5
million) exercised their right to do so (a decent showing in that anything over
60% is favorable). According to the Pew Research Center, 65.3% of eligible non-Hispanic white voters participated
and, of that participation, 58% voted for Trump and 37% voted for Clinton. Of
the overall number of whites who voted for Trump, 54% of white males favored
Trump. And while Clinton captured the majority women voters, more white women
(47%) voted for Trump than Clinton (45%).
In fact, white Americans, in general, have repeatedly favored the more
conservative agendas of the Republican Party over the more liberal agendas of
the Democratic Party, and the reason tends to be, according to Hillary Clinton,
is the marriage factor. Women married to men side with policies that favor
their husband’s employment opportunities and corporate advantages as
bread-winners. (Lucia Graves, The Guardian, September 25, 2017)

It should also be noted that 79% of Asian
Americans favored Clinton in 2016 over Trump (18%), according to the Asian
American Legal Defense and Education Fund; and 66% of Latin Americans voted for
Clinton over Trump (28%)

Voting patterns tend to indicate that a
majority of white Americans do not favor the presidential candidates a majority
of people of color prefer. Why is this?

Is it the political policies people of color mostly endorse?
Universal Health Care
Tuition-Free Public College Education
Gun Control
Living Wage
Job Security
Pro-Choice
Eco-Friendly Economic Growth

These are policies favored by the
majority of Americans across the racial divides. The major concerns and fears
among white people lie with who controls the agenda racially.

Such fears are incited by a report, premised
upon the US Census Bureau, combined with the research of the Center for
American Progress, the American Enterprise Institute, and demographer William
Fry of the Brookings Institute, who forecast that the times are changing; that
by 2044, America will comprise a majority of people of color. Non-Hispanic
whites will cease to the majority population. This reality has already occurred
in Hawaii, New Mexico, and Texas, where not only the majority of the
population, but the majority of eligible voters are people of color. During the
2020s, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, and New Jersey will join their ranks. In the
2030s, Alaska, Louisiana, and New York will follow, with Connecticut, Delaware,
Illinois, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Virginia trailing close behind in the
2040s. The wave will mostly move from the South and Southwest encompassing most
of the northern states no later than 2060.

But even by 2060, when most of
the country has made this transition, upper New England – Maine, New Hampshire
and Vermont – will remain the whitest states in the nation.

How is this forecast received along political party
lines?

Another Pew Research Center survey revealed that 59% of Republicans and
Republican-leaning independents view the prospected people of color majority in
a negative light, while 40% of Republicans believe such change will either be
positive or have no impact at all.

As for Democrats or Democratic-leaning independents, 22% said that
a people of color majority would weaken American culture, while 75% of
Democrats believe that this change will have either a positive impact or no
impact at all.

The fear of this changing demographic seems to reflect the conservative
leaning of white Americans.

What are other policy and procedural shifts that
could accompany this demographic change?

Economist Valerie Wilson, in a report for the
Economic Policy Institute (March 9, 2016) said that by 2032, based on information
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and
trends in college completion by race and ethnicity, more than a decade
before people of color make up the nation’s majority, people of color will
comprise the majority of the working class (those without college degrees). As a result, greater measures will be pursued to resolve wage
stagnation and economic inequality through policies aimed at raising living
standards for the working class. Because the working class will be a majority
of people of color, raising working class living standards will require
bridging racial and ethnic divides.

The
best way to advance policies that raise living standards for working people is
for diverse groups to recognize they share more in common than not, and to work
together toward:

Full
employment and equal pay for equal work

Universal
child care and early childhood education

Stronger
collective bargaining (the re-emergence of unions)

Higher
minimum wages

Voting
rights protections

Reforms
to immigration and criminal justice systems

In other words, policies that will
benefit everyone, including white people. But this is not the narrative most
white Americans, divided along racial, ethnic and class divisions are hearing.

How Prepared are White
American for Change?

White Americans, for the most
part, are ill-equipped in preparing for life in a nation where the majority of
citizens are people of color. The reason for this is that even the most
progressive-minded among you have lived most of your lives in segregated residential,
working, educational and social environments in which people of your race have
set the standards of behavior and determined the priority of concerns to which
people of other races and ethnicities had to adjust and assimilate.

A recent survey of the Public Religion Research
Institute supports my position in its findings that 75% of white people don’t
have any friends of color. For me, this was evident even in New York City,
which served as my second home for over seven years. Even in one of the most
racially and ethnically diverse cities in the world, racially segregated and
economically gated communities defined the lifestyle of this urban setting.

Now if segregated living is the unfortunate
reality in which most white Americans are reared, you can comprehend the
greater magnitude of this problem as it applies to upper New England, the
whitest region of the country, and particularly Vermont.

As a result, while most white
Americans, from 2045-2060, will be painfully adjusting to, and in many cases
resisting, this demographic shift, Vermont will be seen as a refuge for white flight
from what they feel as racism by people of color.

Now “racism” is defined as “prejudice plus
power.” We all probably harbor some degree of prejudice toward another ethnic
or racial group based on the stereotypes and distorted impressions that have
influenced us. But when our prejudice is empowered by political, financial,
military, and legal forces that enable us to enforce our fears, suspicions,
mistrust and hatred upon others preventing them from attaining the privileges
we enjoy, then our prejudice, combined with power, becomes racism, homophobia,
sexism, xenophobia, islamophobia, or other forms of bigotry and oppression.

A 2016 Public Religion
Research Institute poll found that 57% of white Americans believed that
discrimination against them was as big a problem as discrimination against African
Americans and other minorities. A 2017 Gen-Forward poll of white millennials
found 48% shared the same feeling, showing that this sentiment crossed
generations, and is probably shared by some of you here. But this is the same
sentiment that feeds the growing momentum and resurgence of alt-right and white
supremacist organizations that claim they’re not racist, they’re just affirming
and trying to protect their own.

Unless you, as citizens of this state, take seriously this growing sentiment developing within and beyond this state – one of the whitest states in the union; and unless you move proactively in countering these prejudicial fears with excitement and hope that come from honest multicultural and interracial interaction, you will continue to be ill-equipped and grossly unprepared for life in a nation where the majority of citizens are people of color. You will become part of a festering wound of discrimination that has never healed, rather than the balm or salve that, according to the African American Spiritual, heals the “sin-sick soul.”

What Might
White Vermonters Do?

What might white Vermonters do to become part of the
solution rather than part of the problem?

Become part of a social network led and
facilitated by people of color that gets you out of your racial comfort zones
and ethnic familiarity to experience the needed discomforts that come with
evolving into a more compassionate human being.

Organizations such as FORE (Focus on
Racial Equity) should be proactive in attracting people of color to its
membership and leadership and increasing opportunities for social and
educational gatherings of multiracial interaction.

Parents with children of color, be
assertive in introducing them to social networks of color in your area that
they can attend regularly to help them develop a greater sense of self-esteem.

Students
considering college, rid yourself of the bigoted notion that black colleges are
inferior, and consider applying to a predominantly black college or university.

Encourage, mentor, groom and inspire people
of color for leadership in local, state and national political offices, and
pressure our state party leaders to make room for such prospects.

Explore
the underside of Vermont history concerning racism and slavery that contributed
to this state being one of the whitest states in the union. In this request,
allow me to elaborate.

You will discover that
though Vermont entered the nation as a “slave-free” state, there were
exceptions to this rule that allowed for the enslavement of African Americans
women up to age 18 and men up to twenty-one. Yet even these allowances were
violated by prominent citizens of the state. Harvey Amani Whitfield, Professor
of History at the University of Vermont, mentions in his book, The Problem
of Slavery in Early Vermont, that State Supreme Court
Judge Stephen Jacobs and Levi Allen, brother of the military leader Ethan
Allen, were two of many Vermonters who enslaved African Americans long past the
age prohibiting their bondage.

Furthermore, while most
white Vermonters in the first half of the 19th century abhorred the
institution of slavery, they also believed that African Americans could not
prosper alongside white people and favored their emigration to Africa. Vermont
historian, Elise Guyette, documents well in her book, Discovering Black
Vermont,the popular sentiment in favor of African colonization
represented during this time by leading figures of the state.

Add to this the fact
that because Vermont never had a large enough industry or a critical mass of
people of color to attract a huge migration of such individuals, the state has
remained one of the whitest regions of the country. And while it is progressive
in many ways, its predominantly white makeup has consistently contributed to
incidents of racial insensitivity and hostility toward people of color.

As
Vermont becomes one of the last bastions of a white majority amid a majority nation
of color, the urgency increases for white Vermonters, along with Vermonters of
color, to resist the tendency to maintain its culture of white privilege.

Ladies and gentlemen, sisters and brothers, it is not
enough to crave a piece of the American pie when for centuries the recipe has
proven poisonous to our health. It is time to change the recipe, to find new
ingredients where all who hunger for peace, justice and security may be fully
fed and amply nourished at the one table to which all are invited as honored
guest, and no one is turned away.

I
end as I began, with the prophetic warning of Bob Dylan:

The
line it is drawn,
The curse it is cast.
The slow one now
Will later be fast,
As the present now
Will later be past.
The order is rapidly fadin’.
And the first one now
Will later be last,
For the times they are a-changin’